Zju wrote: ↑Wed Nov 10, 2021 12:50 pm
On the other hand, I'm still not sure why one couldn't store that information as slices and whatnot.
Sure, you can do this. I just think it's way harder than people are thinking.
Try this: take a steak. Cut it carefully into slices or cubes of the size you think is best for your replicator.
Congrats, you've invented steak tartare. Which tastes different from an uncut steak.
Cook it, and you've invented hamburger. (To be more precise, hamburger is a combination of belly fat from certain cattle, and lean meat from certain
other cattle. Both sources on their own are unpalatable, but the combination is tasty enough. And also doesn't taste like a cooked steak.)
I granted the slices idea in the original post— I said you could use 1 cm
3 samples instead. I think if people are thinking "all I need are ten molecules", they're fooling themselves— most dishes have more than ten ingredients, and none of them are homogenous in a cooked dish.
But for fun, let's look at the other side of the problem: how many variations do you need? It's trivial to identify replicator food if every time you run it, you get Anton Ego's ratatouille. How much variety is needed so that people don't complain it's either repetitive, or not as good as Mama's food?
1. Multiple varieties of each source ingredient. As a starter, there's 250 breeds of cattle.
2. Sub-varieties: sex, age, gelding. Yes, these taste different.
3. Individual variation— think wine or cheese.
4. Parts of the ingredient— e.g. cuts of beef.
5. Variation within the part (beef has connective tissue, bits of fat, etc.)
6. The appearance of the cell at various temperatures from frozen to seared.
7. The effect of various pre-heating techniques: tenderizing, cutting (cf. my lettuce example), marination, aging, fermentation.
8. The effect of different heating techniques: slow-cooked is very different from flash-fried.
9. The effect of distance from the heat— we probably want the outside of things seared, the inside far less so.
10. The effect of post-heating techniques— glazing, pickling, etc.
Let's say each of these has 20 samples. Each are independent variables, so the effect has to be multiplied together. That's a factor of 10 trillion, or 13 orders of magnitude. And a real cook or food scientist could probably double my list.
And please, folks, don't go all engineer's-disease on me and say "oh, the temperature differences don't need separate samples, that's just a simple filter."
Cooking is a complex process. It's not "all the molecules stay the same but get hotter." It breaks down molecules, creates new ones in a complex way that isn't even fully understood.
I understand, by the way, that we've got some warring intuitions going. You folks are thinking "that zompist, he's not seeing all the repetitiveness in the data." And I'm thinking "These folks keep forgetting how complex any food dish is, and forget how badly engineers can slip up by making inappropriate simplifications."